THO art moulded in
marble impassive,
False goddess, fair statue of strife,
Yet standest on
pedestal massive,
A
symbol and token of life.
Thou art still, not
with stillness of langour,
And
calm, not with calm boding rest ;
For thine is all
wrath and all anger,
That throbs far and near in the breast
Of man, by thy
presence possess'd.
With the brow of a
fallen archangel,
The
lips of a beautiful fiend,
And locks that are
snake-like to strangle,
And
eyes from whose depths may be glean'd
The presence of
passions, that tremble
Unbidden, yet shine as they may
Through features too
proud to dissemble
Too
cold and too calm to betray
Their secrets to
creatures of clay.
Thy breath stirreth
faction and party.
Men
rise, and no voice can avail
To stay
them—rose-tinted Astarte
Herself at thy presence turns pale.
For deeper and
richer the crimson
That gathers behind thee throws forth
A halo thy raiment
and limbs on,
And
leaves a red track in the path
That flows thy
wine-press of wrath.
For behind thee red
rivulets trickle,
Men
fall by thy hands swift and lithe,
As corn falleth down
to the sickle,
As
grass falleth down to the scythe.
Thine arm, strong
and cruel, and shapely,
Lifts high the sharp, pitiless lance,
And rapine and ruin
and rape lie
Around thee. The Furies advance,
And Ares awakes from
his trance.
We, too, with our
bodies thus weakly,
With hearts hard and dangerous, thus
We owe thee—the
saints suffered meekly
Their wrongs—it is not so with us.
Some share of thy
strength thou hast given
To
mortals refusing in vain
Thine aid. We have
suffered and striven
Till we have grown
reckless of pain,
Though feeble of heart and of brain.
Fair spirit,
alluring if wicked,
False deity, terribly real,
Our senses are
trapp'd, our souls trickèd
By
thee and thy hollow ideal.
The soldier who
falls in his harness,
And
strikes his last stroke with slack hand,
On his dead face thy
wrath and thy scorn is
Imprinted. Oh ! seeks he a land
Where he shall
escape thy command ?
When the blood of
thy victims lies red on
That stricken field, fiercest and last,
In the sunset that
gilds Armageddon
With battle-drift still overcast—
When the smoke of
thy hot conflagrations
O'ershadows the earth as with wings,
Where nations have
fought against nations,
And
kings have encounter'd with kings,
When cometh the end
of all things.
Then those who have
patiently waited,
And
borne, unresisting, the pain
Of thy vengeance
unglutted, unsated,
Shall they be rewarded again ?
Then those who,
enticed by thy laurels,
Or
urged by thy promptings unblest,
Have striven and
stricken in quarrels,
Shall they, too, find pardon and rest ?
We know not, yet
hope for the best.